• Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Donate
  • Login
Watchdog Uganda
  • Home
  • News
    • National
    • Politics
    • World News
    • Media Outreach Newswire
    • Africa News
    • Tourism
    • Community News
    • Luganda
    • Sports
      • Football
      • Motorsport
  • Op-Ed
    • #Out2Lunch
    • Conversations with
    • Politics
    • Relationships
  • Business
    • Agriculture
    • CEOs & Entrepreneurs,
    • Companies
    • Finance
    • Products
    • RealEstate
    • Technology
  • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
  • People
    • Showbiz
      • Salon Mag
  • Special Report
    • Education
    • Voices
  • Reviews
    • Products
    • Events
    • Hotels
    • Restaurants
    • Places
  • WD-TV
  • Donate
  • China News
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • National
    • Politics
    • World News
    • Media Outreach Newswire
    • Africa News
    • Tourism
    • Community News
    • Luganda
    • Sports
      • Football
      • Motorsport
  • Op-Ed
    • #Out2Lunch
    • Conversations with
    • Politics
    • Relationships
  • Business
    • Agriculture
    • CEOs & Entrepreneurs,
    • Companies
    • Finance
    • Products
    • RealEstate
    • Technology
  • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
  • People
    • Showbiz
      • Salon Mag
  • Special Report
    • Education
    • Voices
  • Reviews
    • Products
    • Events
    • Hotels
    • Restaurants
    • Places
  • WD-TV
  • Donate
  • China News
No Result
View All Result
Watchdog Uganda
No Result
View All Result

SAMUEL LUKANGA: Age over youth: Grandfather effect shapes politics. Uganda!

Watchdog Uganda by Watchdog Uganda
2 years ago
in Op-Ed, Politics
1 0
Samuel Lukanga

Samuel Lukanga

ShareTweetSendShare

As millennial and post-millennial voters become the largest group of voters around the world, the ‘grandfather effect’ has seen politicians of advanced ages retain or win office.

This follows a new study of 1000 young voters which has busted the myth that younger voters prefer young political leaders – which is evident with only a handful of world leaders being aged under 39 years.

The political science study found that age (up to 70 and older) and experience won the youth vote, provided the older candidates have left-of-centre policies that support younger voters’ positions on social and identity issues.

Although older candidates with left-wing policies are preferred, this is often but not always necessarily the case with younger candidates.

As a social scientist and a leader by practice, I set out to explore why younger voters are drawn to older male candidates in more than one advanced western democracy – raising questions about whether there is something ‘different’ about the voting habits of millennials and post-millennials.

While large numbers of young voters support young leaders running for office, such as Jacinda Ardern in New Zealand in 2020 – they can also show strong support for relatively older candidates such as Bernie Sanders in the US and Jeremy Corbyn in the UK – and even candidates aged 80+ such as Uganda’s Museveni and Germany’s Greens MP Hans-Christian Ströbele.

Millennials and post-millennials do not seem to display any kind of intergenerational bias against older candidates.

In other words, the young voters today appear to be happy to support older candidates, provided their policy stances are in line with what the young voters feel is important to them.

Y voters born between about 1981 and 1996 are now aged in their 20s and 30s –and post-millennials (Gen Z) born between 1997 and 2012 are coming into voting power. They follow Gen X (1965-1980) and Boomer generations, many of whom are retirees or heading into retirement.

Contrary to the descriptive representation literature, young voters are “significantly more likely to support older candidates if they are aware that these candidates champion general left-wing policies.

All things being equal, younger voters do not prefer younger candidates to older candidates.

Even though young voters are often described as disengaged and disinterested in conventional political participation, they are known to be able to mobilise in remarkable, non-conventional ways.

As Mugabe described the latter group in 1989: “There exists among the membership of ZANU a minority, but very powerful bourgeois group which champions the cause of international finance and national private capital, whose interests thus stand opposed to the development and growth of a socialist and egalitarian society in Zimbabwe.” So is currently happening in Uganda.

Politically, the state and the ruling NRM party became indistinguishable, as a lower-middle class was built quickly through the bureaucracy, and corruption and patronage systems emerged parallel to the growth of a comprador faction.

The socialist agenda in Uganda has been adjourned indefinitely. We don’t talk about socialism in a party that is led by people who own large tracts of land and employ a lot of cheap labor.

When the freedom fighters were fighting in Luwero bushes, they were fighting not to disturb the system but to dismantle it. And what are we seeing now? Leaders are busy implementing the very same agendas which our plucky present day veterans were fighting against.

With a very valorous young population, the NRM government has unlike the past, slightly failed to utilize this enthusiastic youthful force. Our young people’s influence on national politics remains limited. There is a general sense that traditional politics and representative democracy—whereby voters determine the outcome of power struggles at the ballot box—fail to attract the attention of younger cohorts who feel alienated from political processes.

Recent events in west Africa have shown that youth are critical in bringing about social and political transformation in Africa. From the dissolution of the apartheid regime in South Africa in the early 1990s and the Jasmine Revolution in Tunisia in 2011 to the ‘Y’en a Marre!’ (‘Enough is enough!’) and ‘Ma Carte d’Electeur, Mon Arme’ (‘My voting card, my weapon’) campaigns in Senegal in 2011–12 and the third- term revolution in Burkina Faso in 2014, young people remain at the forefront of democratic struggles on the continent.

In the current Uganda, based on our governance system, indeed the grandfather effect shapes politics. Tunisia has almost just survived victimization of the same governance design.

For God & My Country, Uganda!

Lukanga Samuel
lukangasamuel55@gmail.com
+256 785 717379

The writer is a social development enthusiast and an Ambassador of Humanity.


Do you have a story in your community or an opinion to share with us: Email us at editorial@watchdoguganda.com
ShareTweetSendShare

Related Posts

Politics

“Practice Faith In Service Delivery”, Minister Babalanda Tells Christians

15th June 2025 at 22:52
Richard Musaazi
Conversations with

RICHARD MUSAAZI: Terrorism: We cannot wage a “war on terrorism”, yet war itself is terrorism

13th June 2025 at 10:59
Dr. Ayub Mukisa (Ph.D.)
Conversations with

Dr. Ayub Mukisa: Karamoja: A beautiful region with resources, but defined as a champion of poverty, scarcity and underdevelopment

12th June 2025 at 14:32
Next Post

Aromatic Ascension: Uganda Sets New Coffee Export Record at $940.3m

  • Prostitution in Uganda- Courtesy Photo

    10 dangerous hotspots known for prostitutes in Kampala

    1065 shares
    Share 426 Tweet 266
  • Uganda’s Billionaires 2025: Once Again Sudhir Ruparelia Leads a Resilient Pack

    27 shares
    Share 11 Tweet 7
  • Makerere University Don on the spot over fraudulent acquisition of land

    29 shares
    Share 12 Tweet 7
  • Pastor Bugingo Seeks Reconciliation with Teddy and Children, Prays for Makula’s Twins

    15 shares
    Share 6 Tweet 4
  • ‘Age is just a number’ comes true as NRM’s Hajji Kigongo formalizes marital status with pretty girl

    117 shares
    Share 47 Tweet 29
Facebook Twitter

Contact Information

Watchdog Uganda is a portal for solution journalism, trending news plus cutting edge commentaries in the fields of politics, security, business, tourism, entertainment, technology, agriculture, climate change, environment, public health et al. We also give preference to Ugandan community news and topical discussions. The portal also publishes community news and topical discussions.

Email: editorial@watchdoguganda.com
To Advertise:Click here

Latest News

“Practice Faith In Service Delivery”, Minister Babalanda Tells Christians

15th June 2025 at 22:52

New Leadership at Rotary Club Mukono Central Pledges to Deepen Community Impact

15th June 2025 at 15:14

Check out

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Minister Muruli Mukasa

LIST: New salary structure for civil servants starting July 2020 out; scientists, lecturers get juicy pay rise

24th May 2020 at 10:45
Pregnant woman

Shock as 17-year old boy impregnates his two sisters during Covid-19 lockdown 

17th June 2020 at 08:17
Sudhir Ruparelia is set to speak at business forum in United Kingdom

Billionaire Sudhir’s wisdom on how to invest in real estate

0

How a boy’s destiny turned from cotton grower to communications guru

0

“Practice Faith In Service Delivery”, Minister Babalanda Tells Christians

15th June 2025 at 22:52

New Leadership at Rotary Club Mukono Central Pledges to Deepen Community Impact

15th June 2025 at 15:14

© 2025 Watchdog Uganda

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • National
    • Politics
    • World News
    • Media Outreach Newswire
    • Africa News
    • Tourism
    • Community News
    • Luganda
    • Sports
      • Football
      • Motorsport
  • Op-Ed
    • #Out2Lunch
    • Conversations with
    • Politics
    • Relationships
  • Business
    • Agriculture
    • CEOs & Entrepreneurs,
    • Companies
    • Finance
    • Products
    • RealEstate
    • Technology
  • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
  • People
    • Showbiz
      • Salon Mag
  • Special Report
    • Education
    • Voices
  • Reviews
    • Products
    • Events
    • Hotels
    • Restaurants
    • Places
  • WD-TV
  • Donate
  • China News

© 2025 Watchdog Uganda